Mum Pooch vs Belly Fat: How to Tell the Difference (and Fix Each)

Postpartum recovery / Made by mums

Mum Pooch or Belly Fat? Here Is How to Actually Tell

That soft lower belly that lingers after birth is not always what it looks like. Knowing what you are dealing with changes everything about how you fix it.

Quick answer A mum pooch is usually a mix of deep-core weakness, separated tummy muscles (diastasis recti), softened skin and some fat that naturally settled during pregnancy. It is rarely pure fat. You tell them apart by how the belly feels and behaves: a doming or gap down the midline points to diastasis or core weakness, a soft pinchable layer points to fat, and crepey looseness points to skin. Core work helps the first, gradual fat loss helps the second, and skin and stretch marks improve slowly on their own time.

If you have stood side-on in the mirror wondering why your lower belly still pooches months after your baby arrived, you are in good company. New mums everywhere ask this, whether they are in the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand or across Europe. The phrases change a little (mum tum, mummy tummy, the pooch, the apron), but the worry is the same: is this fat, or is something else going on? The honest answer is that your postpartum belly is usually telling a more complicated story than a single word can capture, and that is genuinely good news, because it means there is more you can do than just eat less.

The four things a "mum pooch" can actually be

Most lower-belly pooches are a blend of four things, and they respond to completely different kinds of care. Before you decide what to work on, it helps to know which one (or which combination) is sitting in front of you.

What it is How it feels and looks What helps
Diastasis recti (muscle separation) A gap or soft ridge down the middle of your belly, often with a dome or cone when you sit up or strain Deep-core and breathing work, avoiding crunches that bulge the belly, physio if the gap is wide
Deep-core weakness Belly feels loose and unsupported, lower tummy sticks out by the end of the day, posture has shifted Reconnecting transverse abdominis and pelvic floor with gentle progressive exercise
Belly fat A soft, pinchable layer you can hold; fairly even and squishy rather than tied to the midline Gentle calorie balance, movement, sleep and time; gradual whole-body change, never spot reduction
Loose or crepey skin Skin looks soft, slightly wrinkled or stretched, and does not firm up when you engage your core Time, hydration and patience; exercise cannot tighten skin, and that is normal

The reason this matters: doing endless crunches when your real issue is a tummy-muscle gap can make the doming worse, and trying to diet away what is actually loose skin will only leave you frustrated. Matching the fix to the cause is the whole game.

A simple at-home check you can do today

You do not need any equipment to get a rough sense of what is going on. Lie on your back with your knees bent and feet flat. Place your fingertips just above your belly button, pointing down toward your toes. Lift your head and shoulders gently off the floor, like the start of a small curl. As you lift, feel for a gap between the two ridges of muscle, and notice whether your belly domes up into a ridge or sinks in.

If you feel a gap of roughly two or more finger-widths, or a clear doming, that leans toward diastasis recti or deep-core weakness rather than fat. If instead you feel an even, soft, pinchable layer with no gap or ridge, that leans more toward fat or skin. This is a guide, not a diagnosis, so if you are unsure or the gap feels wide, a women's-health physio can check it properly.

How much each one responds to gentle core and lifestyle work
Deep-core weakness
High
Diastasis recti
Medium
Belly fat
Medium
Loose or stretched skin
Low

These labels are general and gentle on purpose. Everyone heals at a different pace, and a belly that is mostly deep-core weakness will usually feel firmer and flatter with consistent practice, while skin changes take their own quiet time and may never go fully back, which is completely normal after growing a human.

How to gently work on each one

Here is a calm, realistic order of operations. You are not racing anyone, and you are not broken. You are rebuilding.

  1. Start with breath and deep core. Before any "ab" work, relearn to breathe into your ribs and gently draw your lower belly in on the exhale. This wakes up the transverse abdominis and pelvic floor, the muscles that flatten and support from the inside.
  2. Protect the midline. If you have a gap or doming, skip full crunches and sit-ups for now. Choose moves that keep your belly flat as you work, so the muscles knit closer instead of bulging apart.
  3. Build slowly and consistently. Short sessions most days beat one heroic workout. Progress from breathing to gentle holds to standing core work over weeks, not days.
  4. Support fat loss kindly. If there is a soft layer to soften, lean on steady whole-body habits: nourishing meals, gentle movement, and whatever sleep you can claw back. There is no spot reduction, so this is patient, full-body work.
  5. Make peace with skin and time. Hydrate, keep moving, and give your skin months, not weeks. If looseness stays, that is your body's history, not a failure, and no honest program will promise to erase it.

Not sure where to start? We made the map for you

The Mumma Glow postpartum core guides walk you step by step through deep-core breathing, diastasis-safe movement and a gentle lower-belly plan you can do at home during nap time, no gym needed.

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Frequently asked questions

How do I know if my mum pooch is fat or diastasis recti?

Do the gentle finger check lying on your back: lift your head and feel along your midline. A gap of about two or more finger-widths, or a belly that domes into a ridge, points toward diastasis recti or deep-core weakness. A soft, even, pinchable layer with no gap points more toward fat. It is often a mix of both, and a women's-health physio can confirm if you are unsure.

Can I get rid of a mum pooch with exercise alone?

For the part that is deep-core weakness or muscle separation, gentle progressive core work makes a real difference and can noticeably flatten and firm the lower belly. For the part that is fat, exercise helps but works alongside nutrition and time, and there is no way to spot-reduce one area. For loose skin, exercise cannot tighten it. Most mums see the best results by combining gentle core work with kind, steady habits.

How long does it take to fix a postpartum lower belly?

It is gradual and varies a lot from person to person. Many mums feel their core reconnecting within a few weeks of consistent breathing and gentle work, while visible changes to firmness and shape build over months. Skin and stretch marks soften on their own slow timeline. There is no fixed deadline, so be patient and kind with yourself.

Is mum tum the same as belly fat?

Not usually. "Mum tum" is a casual term for the whole postpartum lower belly, which is typically a blend of softened core muscles, possible muscle separation, some settled fat and stretched skin. Treating it as pure fat is why so many mums feel stuck, because dieting alone does not address the muscle and skin parts of the picture.

When should I see a doctor or physio about my belly?

Reach out if you feel a wide gap down your midline, notice doming or a bulge when you sit up, have ongoing back or pelvic pain, leak when you cough or sneeze, or are recovering from a C-section and unsure what is safe. A GP or women's-health physiotherapist can assess you properly and guide your next steps.

This article is general education and not medical advice. Results are gradual and vary from person to person. Exercise cannot remove loose skin or spot-reduce fat in one area. Please check with your GP or a women's-health physiotherapist before starting a new program, especially after a C-section or if you suspect diastasis recti. Written by The Mumma Glow Team.